SKU: EN-P10225
The Lumia 710 comes in plain ol' black and white, but a selection of brightly coloured backplates based on the jaunty CMYK shades used in colour printing give the phone a playful edge. It's bit of a chubster compared to its big brother the Lumia 800, and the plasticky casing has little of the 800's sophistication, but it does feel solid to hold. If you're more meerkat than cheetah, you'll be glad to hear the 710 caters well for social animals, with excellent social networking integration, particularly Facebook.
If you'd like to see the phone in closer detail, hit play on the video above for the full review, What do you make of the Lumia 710? Are you a fan of Windows Phone, or are you waiting for Windows 8 to reserve judgement? Let me know in the comments below or swivel your way over to CNET UK's Facebook page, Nokia has just unleashed its second Windows Phone handet, the Lumia 710, on the British public, Take a look at Natasha's video review, Our favourite Finns recently parachuted a new Nokia phone into British stores, as a follow-up to last year's fab Lumia 800, Cheaper and chubbier than its big brother, the Lumia 710 is nevertheless a charming phone, as Natasha Lomas discovers in our video ocean fog iphone case review above..
CNET también está disponible en español. Don't show this again. "A couple of colleagues had my original Galaxy Tab and needed to use it for something, but I wasn't there. They managed to figure out my pattern by looking at the fingerprints on the glass, and it only took them a few minutes," Bray said in a post yesterday. I suspect it's probably not a huge problem for those of us who keep phones in a pocket that will swipe the screen. But I can't help but notice that my unpocketable Galaxy Tab 10.1 has a lot of fingerprints on it right now and that sometimes I can tell what game was being played on the family iPad by the smudges.
And it only took about five peanuts and 10 finger swipes to produce the photo above, (No, that's not my real swipe pattern, but yes, that is real dust and scratches.), The blog post got me thinking about what I think is a worse problem for the pattern-unlock feature: it can be very visible, On my Nexus S phone, the feature is sluggish enough that I have to trace the dots slowly, and the red track my finger leaves is ocean fog iphone case very visible, Performance is better on the Galaxy Nexus, but judging by how fast my son figured out my pattern, it's pretty easy for the human brain to recognize the pattern..
Maybe Ice Cream Sandwich discriminates against people with beards. Or maybe I use my phone in the dark too much where the image quality is low. Whatever the problem, the mechanism fails as often as not for me, and that's too often. It'd be a lot more convenient, of course, if there we didn't have to worry about unlocking phones at all. But the reality is that a modern smartphone can grant access to your personal and work e-mail, your Twitter and Facebook accounts, whatever files you have stored sites like Google Docs and Dropbox, your contacts list, and your photo and video collection.
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